Posted on 02/21/2013 4:08:01 PM PST by null and void
A widely-known private Egyptian TV channel, which showcases 24-hour rolling clips of belly-dancing, has been accused of airing ads that arouse viewers, and broadcasting illegally.(Courtesy of al-Tet TV channel)
A widely-known private Egyptian TV channel, which showcases 24-hour rolling clips of belly-dancing, has been accused of airing ads that arouse viewers, and broadcasting illegally. An Egyptian court demanded its closure earlier this week.
Despite the ruling, the director, Baleegh Hamdy, says he will not give up broadcasting the al-Tet channel. It is now being aired from a different satellite.
In an interview with Al Arabiya Hamdy added that he is planning to launch a new channel called Bom Tak and another channel on YouTube, also to showcase belly dancing.
Court orders shutdown
Egypts administrative court on Saturday ordered the belly dancing channel to be taken off air for broadcasting without a license.
The channel was also accused of airing advertisements that arouse viewers, sell sexual-enhancement products and promote matchmaking, according to the courts statement.
According to Hamdy, the court ruling was not based on accurate evidence. The judge was supposed to check the facts present in the lawyers allegations.
The lawyer, who filed a suit against al-Tet, accuses the channel of providing a platform for matchmaking, but this is not true, the director told Al Arabiyas English website.
The channel does not air ads for sexual products that arent licensed, he added.
There are more than 150 channels in Egypt airing the same ads for the same products ... why are people picking on al-Tet?
Hamdy said that al-Tet had a license and that it is not aired through the Nilesat provider, but aired on Noorsat, an Arab satellite provider headquartered in Bahrain.
The judge issued a court ruling that says the channel must be taken off the Nilesat, Hamdy said, quoting the courts final statement.
He added that the Egyptian court should not have authority over the Bahrain-based satellite provider.
However, contrary to his expectations, the Noorsat provider in Bahrain shut down al-Tet after the Egyptian court ruling, Hamdy confirmed.
Noorsat was supposed to respect the contract between us, but the channel is still aired anyway, he said.
Passion for dancing
Egypts administrative court ordered al-Tet off the air
Like channels dedicated to sports and movies only, Hamdy wonders why some Egyptians find it a problem to have a channel dedicated to belly dancing. All that I did was to collect these clips and air them on a channel especially for belly dancing. When you watch a movie and a dancing scene comes on, you are forced to watch it to continue the movie, he said.
But people have remote controls and are free to choose to watch what they want.
The internet and the Hotbird satellite also contain more sexually explicit content that are still permitted in Egypt, he added.
Al-Tet is among many channels that opened in Egypt after the 2011 uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak. The channels owner is an American, said Hamdy.
By the beginning of 2013, al-Tet opened in the U.S. and in Canada, it will be up next month in Switzerland, according to the director.
In addition to launching a new channel for belly dancing called 'Bom Tak' and another on YouTube, Hamdy expressed his hopes to open a bouquet of channels dedicated to all kinds of dancing, including ballet and tango.
Islamists have nothing to do with it
Despite the court ruling, Hamdy told Al Arabiya he respects the Egyptian judiciary system and denied that the Muslim Brotherhood had anything to do with the channels shutdown.
A spokesman for Egypts Muslim Brotherhood (MB) on Sunday told Al Arabiya that the movement has welcomed the court decision to shut down al-Tet.
We welcome court rulings that aim to protect the communitys values, Abdel Haleem Behiry, the MBs Freedom and Justice newspaper deputy editor-in-chief, told Al Arabiya.
Like rotten food ... there are rotten ideas being fed to our society, he added. The judicial system is one of the factors that can protect the societys values, which both Muslims and Christians agree on.
The spokesman denied that the MB had anything to do with the channels closure, saying it was a court ruling and the channel was not operating on a legal basis.
Who indeed?
So let it be written, so let it be done.
Maybe this popular channel will get aired here over Al-Jizz-era’s network. Al Gore will watch, no doubt.
Apparently the 72 virgins awaiting suicide bombers want no competition.
The world needs more belly dancers and to kill more Jihadists
I remember when the South American songbird Shakira came out with the worldwide hit single, “Hips Don’t Lie”, which gave a good demonstration of her ‘hard’ belly dancing style.
It was a boon to sports medicine and rehab people as a huge number of women tried to do advanced belly dancing with no experience or practice or training. In NYC, some bar sponsored a “Shake it like Shakira” contest, in which no fewer than six women injured themselves.
She’s actually hurt herself a few times doing it.
Here is the music video, and it’s a little naughty, but if you look at it from the technical belly dancing standpoint, she’s quite good.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUT5rEU6pqM
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